UK Rejects Tidal Barrage, but Smaller Tech May Endure

The UK government has shelved schemes to build a tidal barrage across the Severn estuary, West of London, that could have supplied 5% of the UK’s power needs. What reports are missing is the endurance of more nimble tidal turbines and other marine power devices–distributed energy devices that the UK is helping to nurture.

Barrages are essentially hydro dams that capture each high tide and generate electricity from their outflow.The first large barrage and largest currently operating crosses the estuary of the Rance River on France’s Atlantic coast, generating a peak of 240 megawatts–the scale of a large wind farm. Five competing proposals for a Severn barrage were to generate up to 40 times that much from the region’s 14-meter tides.

But the government’s Severn Tidal Power study published today found that the up-to-£34-billion cost would scare off investors. The most cost-effective scheme, it found, would cost nearly twice as much as offshore wind power per megawatt-hour of energy produced. “There is no strategic case at this time for public funding of a scheme to generate energy in the Severn estuary. Other low carbon options represent a better deal for taxpayers and consumers,” says Chris Huhne, the UK’s secretary of state for energy.

Barrages also–for all their potential to generate carbon-free power–stomp a large environmental footprint onto marine ecosystems. A barrage to yield power from the immense tides in Nova Scotia’s Bay of Fundy, for example, would alter the tides as far south as Boston. The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds’ Martin Harper, quoted in BusinessWeek, said today that the Severn project threatened to “destroy huge areas of estuary marsh and mudflats used by 69,000 birds each winter.”

What BusinessWeek buried and others ignored (as in the BBC’s story, Is this the end for UK tidal power?) is the investment that the UK is already making in more environmentally-benign tidal and wave power devices that generate electricity in open water (such as Aquamarine Power’s Oyster wave power machine pictured above). Site leases for several big wave and tidal power projects around Scotland’s Orkney Islands were awarded this spring, concluding a two-year bidding process that elicited strong interest from major utilities and energy entrepreneurs.

As I reported in March for MIT’s Technology Review, those projects that could collectively generate up to 1.2 gigawatts. That’s smaller than the proposed barrage but–if realized–will represent an immense scaleup for an industry that so far has installed only pilot projects involving a handful of small devices.

This post was created for Energywise, IEEE Spectrum’s blog on green power, cars and climate